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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Smeaton v Equifax Plc [2013] EWCA Civ 108 (20 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/108.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 108 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
His Honour Judge Thornton QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
and
SIR ROBIN JACOB
____________________
Keith Smeaton |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Equifax plc |
Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Richard Handyside QC and Alexander Milner (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for the Appellant
Hearing dates : 15, 16 November 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
Introduction
i) compensation pursuant to s.13 for damages and distress suffered by reason of contravention by Equifax of the requirements of the Data Protection Act 1998; andii) damages at large for breach of duty at common law.
(1) whether Equifax was in breach of its duties under the Data Protection Act 1998;
(2) whether Equifax owed Mr Smeaton a duty of care in tort, and if so what the content of the duty was and whether it was breached by Equifax; and
(3) whether any breaches of duty by Equifax caused Mr Smeaton or Ability Records to be unable to raise finance in or after mid-2006 (on which it is common ground that all Mr Smeaton's alleged losses, whatever they may be, depend).
(1) that Mr Smeaton was not refused credit by NatWest on the sole ground of the entry concerning the bankruptcy order, but at least partly because of other adverse data in his credit file;
(2) that Mr Smeaton made no real attempts to raise finance after his unsuccessful application to NatWest in August 2006; and
(3) that even if he had made such attempts, he would not have succeeded in obtaining the substantial loan he was seeking, again largely because of his poor credit record.
In relation to these three arguments the judge said, in Judgment 1, that it was "not possible to find that Equifax's breaches caused no pleaded or claimed loss"; that "I cannot make any findings about [Mr Smeaton's reasons for not making more effort to raise finance]" and that "I cannot make a finding [as to whether Mr Smeaton had any prospect of raising finance] at this stage". At trial Mr Smeaton had been extensively cross-examined on his attempts to raise finance and on the contents of his credit file.
(1) he held that Equifax had breached the Data Protection Act 1998, in particular the fourth data protection principle, but also the first and fifth principles. This was upon the basis that Equifax had failed to take reasonable steps to ensure the accuracy of its data.
(2) he held that Equifax owed Mr Smeaton a duty of care in tort, which was co-extensive with its duties under the Act, and that Equifax breached this duty also.
(3) he found that Equifax's breaches of duty caused Mr Smeaton loss, in that they prevented Ability Records from obtaining a loan in and after mid-2006.
The Bankruptcy Order, its advertisement and its rescission
"Upon the Petition of Messrs L, S and PD Butcher, Creditors which was presented on the 10th day of October 2000
Upon the parties having agreed the terms of settlement hereof and
Upon the parties having entered the agreement annexed
By consent it is ordered that:-
1. The Bankruptcy Order made by District Judge Mostyn on 1st March 2001 be rescinded.
2. The Petition presented by the Creditors on 5th October 2000 be withdrawn by the Creditors, L, S and PD Butcher.
3. The petition deposit of £300 paid by the creditors on 5th October 2000 to be retained by the Official Receiver.
4. Permission to the Debtor to apply to H. M. Land Registry to remove the caution registered against him on 8th March 2001 in respect of Pending Action reference WOB3106127.
5. There be no order as to costs.
6. There be liberty to apply for the purposes of enforcing the terms of this order."
The application to National Westminster Bank in 2006
"Thank you for your recent request for a Business Account.
I regret that on this occasion we are unable to help you for the following reasons. Adverse data revealed in credit reference search/Bankruptcy data revealed. No doubt this decision will come as a disappointment to you, however, I hope that you can understand the Bank's position.
Should your circumstances change in the future, we will be happy to consider a fresh application. If you feel there is information we did not take into account, you may contact me asking that we reconsider our decision. I will generally ask you to provide me with additional information that supports your request to reconsider your application."
"Thank you for taking the time to meet with me to discuss the possibility of getting a Small Firms Loan Guarantee for approx £60K.
I have been in contact with Mr Athwal, as to how much he had done with regards to the previous meeting that you had with him with regards to the opening of an account for Ability Records Ltd, but it fell for a decline because of the adverse data that was in the background.
I am also having to decline your request as the adverse data will be a stumbling block that I am unable to escape, and our lending centre will not entertain any request were this an issue.
I hope that you are able to progress in some way with your ambitions with the Company and wish you all the best for the future, once again I am sorry that I am unable to assist you with the lending required."
". . . the evidence presented by the credit file gave little support for the submission that Mr Smeaton's credit would have been considered to have been so poor that he would never have obtained credit even if his credit file had made no reference to his bankruptcy order. The first and most obvious reason for this finding is that Mr Smeaton's credit file did contain that reference and, furthermore, in the later part of the five-year period it related to, the reference showed him to be an undischarged bankrupt who remained undischarged after the period for automatic discharge had passed. That could well have explained at least some of the negative entries on the file."
"147. Ability's failure to make a further SFLGS application to another participating bank is, on Mr Smeaton's case, explained in this way. His life descended into a tragic mixture of homelessness, living in a car on the streets, mental breakdown, impecuniosity and a consequent inability to progress his business affairs as a direct result of the enormous shock on discovering that he had had an adverse credit record for the last five years and that the bank on which he had pinned so much hope in providing Ability with the necessary step up to obtain the SFLGS, itself an essential feature of its business plan, prevented him from taking anything other than relatively modest steps to further that plan for many moths. He was taking some action, but for some time that action was the best that he could take but were not sufficient to enable him to obtain alternative sources of credit or finance."
The alleged breach of the Data Protection Act 1998
The Data Protection Act
(1) Section 1:1 Basic interpretative provisions.(1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires -"data" means information which –(a) is being processed by means of equipment operating automatically in response to instructions given for that purpose,(b) is recorded with the intention that it should be processed by means of such equipment,(c) is recorded as part of a relevant filing system or with the intention that it should form part of a relevant filing system...(d) [...](e) [...]."data controller" means, subject to subsection (4), a person who (either alone or jointly or in common with other persons) determines the purposes for which and the manner in which any personal data are, or are to be, processed...(2) Section 4:
4 The data protection principles.(1) References in this Act to the data protection principles are to the principles set out in Schedule 1.(2) Those principles are to be interpreted in accordance with Part II of Schedule 1.(3) [...](4) [...] it shall be the duty of a data controller to comply with the data protection principles in relation to personal data with respect to which he is the data controller.(3) Section 13:
13 Compensation for failure to comply with certain requirements.(1) An individual who suffers damage by reason of any contravention by a data controller of any of the requirements of this Act is entitled to compensation from the data controller for that damage.(2) An individual who suffers distress by reason of any contravention by a data controller of any of the requirements of this Act is entitled to compensation from the data controller for that distress if –(a) the individual also suffers damage by reason of the contravention [...](3) In proceedings brought against a person by virtue of this section it is a defence to prove that he had taken such care as in all the circumstances was reasonably required to comply with the requirement concerned.(4) Schedule 1:
SCHEDULE 1 The Data Protection Principles PART I The Principles 4 Personal data shall be accurate and, where necessary, kept up to date.PART II Interpretation of the Principles in Part I The fourth principle 7 The fourth principle is not to be regarded as being contravened by reason of any inaccuracy in personal data which accurately record information obtained by the data controller from the data subject or a third party in a case where –(a) having regard to the purpose or purposes for which the data were obtained and further processed, the data controller has taken reasonable steps to ensure the accuracy of the data, and(b) if the data subject has notified the data controller of the data subject's view that the data are inaccurate, the data indicate that fact.
Insolvency Legislation
(1) A court may make a bankruptcy order against an individual upon the presentation of a creditor's petition, if the conditions in section 271 of the Insolvency Act 1986 are satisfied.(2) When a court makes a bankruptcy order, it must send two copies of the order to the OR.[3]
(3) The OR must then have the order advertised in the London Gazette ("the Gazette") and notify the Chief Land Registrar to enable the order to be registered in the register of writs and orders affecting land.[4]
(4) The OR is also required to enter details of the bankruptcy into the Individual Insolvency Register.[5] (Until 1 April 2004 this was known as the Register of Bankruptcy Orders: I shall use the term "the Register" to refer to the Register of Bankruptcy Orders or the Individual Insolvency Register as applicable.)
(5) Bankruptcies are, generally speaking, automatically discharged after one year. (Prior to 1 April 2004 the relevant period was 3 years.)[6]
(6) A bankruptcy may come to an end prior to discharge by virtue of being annulled under s.282 of the Insolvency Act 1986 or, following a change of circumstances or the discovery of new evidence,[7] by being rescinded under s.375.
(7) Where a court makes an annulment order under s.282, it must notify the Secretary of State (or in practice the OR) of the annulment.[8] Upon being notified of the annulment, the Secretary of State must cause the bankruptcy order to be deleted from the Register.[9]
(8) However, where a court rescinds a bankruptcy order under s.375, it is not required to notify the Secretary of State of the rescission. In this regard, Judgment 2 at [26] contains a number of errors:
(a) The judge correctly noted that "The [Insolvency Rules] have never imposed a requirement on a court to notify the Secretary of State of the fact or terms of a rescission order rescinding a bankruptcy order." However, the Judge then incorrectly held that "since the court has an obligation to notify the Secretary of State of the making of a bankruptcy order, the same court is subject to an implied obligation to notify the Secretary of State that the bankruptcy order so notified has been rescinded".[10] The notion of an implied obligation of this sort is both surprising and unsupported by any authority. With respect to the judge it is quite unsustainable. The judge went on to state that "In practice, courts do notify the Secretary of State of the fact of a rescission order relating to a bankruptcy order by sending the Secretary of State a copy of the order". There is no evidence sufficient to support this finding. Mr Arden suggests that in practice the OR, and through him the Secretary of State, must in practice find out about rescissions because the OR has various statutory functions in relation to the bankrupt, including acting as receiver and manager of his estate immediately upon the making of the bankruptcy order (s.287 of the Insolvency Act 1986) and investigating and reporting to the court on his affairs (s.289 of the Insolvency Act 1986). Someone must therefore tell him to stand down. This may usually be so. It is however of no significance in a case like the present where the OR had not embarked upon these functions. There may be other types of case in which, for whatever reason, the OR does not in fact learn of rescission orders or where the information is, for whatever reason, of little or no practical moment.(b) It does not logically follow from the fact that the court is required to notify the Secretary of State of a bankruptcy order that it must necessarily also be required to notify him of a rescission order. A reasonable reader of the relevant Insolvency Rules would not interpret them in that way.[11](c) Furthermore, that the court is not subject to any such obligation is reasonably clear from a comparison of the current rules 6A.5(a) and 6A.5(d). These rules, which have been in force since 1 April 2004 (subject to non-material amendments), require the Secretary of State to delete information concerning a bankruptcy from the Individual Insolvency Register after receiving notice of an annulment and a rescission respectively. Rule 6A.5(a) now provides that, in the case of an annulment, the information must be deleted where "the bankruptcy order has been annulled…and a period of 3 months has elapsed since notice of the annulment was given to the Secretary of State". By contrast, the equivalent rule in a case of rescission applies where "the bankruptcy order is rescinded by the court under section 375, the Secretary of State has received a copy of the order made by the court, and 28 days have elapsed since receipt of the copy of the order" (rule 6A.5(d)). The difference in wording reflects the fact that there is no requirement that the Secretary of State be given notice of rescission orders. The judge also fell into error in paragraph 34 of that judgment in overlooking this distinction.(d) The judge further found that notification of rescission orders by the courts to the Secretary of State "is obviously done in all other rescission cases since the [Insolvency Service] is able to maintain statistics showing how many rescission orders rescinding a bankruptcy order were made in any year and is also able to amend the [Register] to delete reference to bankruptcy orders that have been rescinded". This finding is also unsatisfactory. The Insolvency Service's statistics can only show the number of rescission orders of which the Service became aware in a given year. They do not show that all rescission orders were notified to the Insolvency Service.[12](9) Where the Secretary of State is notified that a bankruptcy order has been rescinded, he is under an obligation to remove the details of the order from the Register. The judge was mistaken when he stated (at [27])) that this obligation has only existed since 1 April 2004: in fact a rule to this effect has existed since March 1999, and therefore throughout the period material to these proceedings.[13]
(10) Importantly, upon being notified (or provided with a copy) of an order annulling or rescinding a bankruptcy order, the Secretary of State is not under any duty to advertise the fact of the annulment or rescission in the Gazette or anywhere else. Instead, the law gives the former bankrupt the option of requiring the Secretary of State to advertise the annulment, upon payment of an appropriate fee.[14]
(1) Where an order which has been gazetted is annulled, revoked or rescinded, the Registrar shall forthwith give notice of the order of annulment, revocation or rescission to the Board of Trade, who shall publish it in the London Gazette.
(2) The expenses of gazetting shall, where the order is annulled, revoked, or rescinded on the application of the Official Receiver or trustee, be paid out of the estate, and in any other case be paid by the party on whose application the order was made.
(1) The court can, on the application of the bankrupt or a creditor, order the OR to suspend the notification of a bankruptcy order to the Chief Land Registrar and/or the gazetting of the order.[15](2) Alternatively, either the court making the order or the appeal court can grant a general stay of a bankruptcy order pending an appeal, under CPR 52.7(a).
(3) In addition to these two possibilities (referred to in Judgment 2 at [15] and [19]) the Judge also stated (at [19]) that a bankruptcy judge has power to impose a stay of any bankruptcy order under s. 375 Insolvency Act 1986. However, s.375(1) does not expressly refer to any such power and the Judge cited no authority for this statement.
(4) There have never been any rules requiring stays of bankruptcy orders to be notified to the Secretary of State, gazetted, or entered into the Register. This is not surprising, because a stay is a procedural order whose effects may prove to be only temporary. A stay is defined in the Glossary to the CPR as follows:
"A stay imposes a halt on proceedings, apart from any steps allowed by the Rules or the terms of the stay. Proceedings can be continued if a stay is lifted."(5) By contrast, an annulment is a substantive order which has the effect of cancelling the bankruptcy order as if it had never been made: Bailey v. Johnson (1872) LR 7 Exch 263. A rescission has a similar effect.
CRAs and bankruptcy orders
"34. IIR as a source of credit data. Neither the RBO [Register of Bankruptcy Orders] nor the IIR [Individual Insolvency Register] was a direct source of bankruptcy data for Equifax until 2008 when, for the first time, the IS [Insolvency Service] introduced for CRAs a facility enabling the entire contents of the IIR to be transferred electronically from the IIR to each CRA on a daily basis. Until that change occurred, there appeared to be no practical way that the IIR could be used by a CRA to obtain details of bankruptcy orders that were removed from the IIR because they had been discharged, annulled or rescinded…"
91. Until 2008, Equifax was made aware of all bankruptcy orders when they were made because these orders and the date on which they were made were recorded in the London Gazette and Equifax uploaded these entries manually onto its databases. Since 2008, Equifax has taken a subscription from the IS so as to receive by electronic transfer at regular intervals the entire contents of the IIR save for sole trader information which it obtains directly from the London Gazette in electronic format…
93. Equifax [received] information about bankruptcy orders which have been annulled, rescinded or discharged in two different ways. The first way [was] by being notified by the debtor consumer that his or her bankruptcy order has been discharged or has otherwise come to an end. The second way [was] by obtaining details of all discharged, rescinded and annulled bankruptcy orders advertised in the London Gazette. These advertisements appear only when a debtor consumer arranges for a notice advertising in the London Gazette that his or her bankruptcy order has been terminated having paid the current fee.
Consumer credit legislation and guidance
(1) A CRA must be licensed under s.21 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 ("CCA"). Broadly, this requires the OFT to be satisfied that the CRA is a "fit person" to carry on a consumer credit business (s.25).(2) Under s.157(1) of the CCA, a consumer may request from a lender the details of the name and address of any CRA to which the lender has applied for information about the consumer in the preceding 28 days. The lender has seven working days to comply with such a request.[16] Since 1 February 2011 it has been compulsory for creditors to provide this information upon declining to enter into a credit agreement, under s.157(A1), and in fact Mr Beresford's evidence was that before that date lenders "invariably" provided the information to consumers when refusing them credit in any event.[17] They were required to do so in order to comply with the Guide to Credit Scoring 2000, discussed in paragraph 53 below.
(3) Under s.157(1) of the CCA, a consumer may request a copy of his credit file from a CRA and, upon paying a fee of £2, is entitled to receive a copy within seven working days.[18] At the same time as providing the credit file, the CRA must also give the consumer a statement of his rights to have any inaccurate information corrected.
(4) By s.159(1), a consumer who considers that an entry in his credit file is incorrect and that he is likely to be prejudiced by the entry may give notice to the CRA requiring it to remove or amend the entry. The CRA must remove or amend the entry within 28 days, or alternatively inform the consumer that it has taken no action (s.159(2)). If it takes no action, the consumer may require the CRA to add to the file a notice of correction of up to 200 words and include a copy of the notice of correction when providing credit data to its customers (s. 159(3)).
(5) If a CRA fails to comply with the requirements of s.157(A1) or (1) or s.158, it commits a criminal offence.
"This Guide is for developers and users of scoring system that are used in making decisions about consumer credit. It updates the second edition, drawn up in 1993.
The Office of Fair Trading supports the principles of scoring and recognises its important contribution to responsible credit granting.
Credit scoring measures the statistical probability that credit will be satisfactorily repaid. It is based on the fact that it is possible, using statistical techniques, to predict the future performance of applicants with similar characteristics to previous applications (either of the credit grantor itself or groups of credit grantors).
[...]
Since the Guide was last updated, techniques have been continually developed and improved and new legislation, such as the Data Protection Act 1998, has been enacted. The relevant principles in the Act have been taken into account in this Guide. [...]
In drawing up the new Guide, the industry has recognised the Office of Fair Trading's concern that consumers should be given reasons for a refusal of credit. It is important that reasons are meaningful and useful to consumers; but at the same time there are dangers to lenders and their customers if credit scoring systems are opened up to manipulation and fraud through excessive disclosure.
[...]
Credit is not a right. The purpose of this Guide is to ensure that everyone can be confident that credit granting decisions based on credit scoring are made fairly."
"Since the publication of the last Guide to Credit Scoring in 1993, and my Office's report on Credit Scoring in 1992, there have been significant advances in the use of this method of credit assessment, and relevant legislative changes such as the implementation of the EC Directive on Data Protection. As a result of those changes my Office decided to take a fresh look at the issues involved, in consultation with the credit industry and the Office of the Data Protection Registrar. That led to a number of proposals for amendments to the industry Guide, to bring it into line with the new regulatory environment and to improve the provision of information to consumers.
[...] The scope of the Guide has been broadened so that it applies not only to decisions about initial applications for credit but also subsequent requests for amendments to existing facilities. Lenders will inform applicants that scoring may be used in an assessment of their application, and will explain how credit scoring works and indicate some of the characteristics common to the scoring process. If requested they will also provide details of the logic involved in the automated decision taking. Where an application is declined, the lender will provide a clear explanation of the principal reasons for the decline, including whether this was based on credit reference agency information. The applicant will be informed that they have a right of appeal which will be considered manually, and will be given the opportunity to provide additional information in support of their application. If the applicant's credit reference agency file contains a notice of correction, there will be systems in place to ensure that the application is reviewed manually.
Credit scoring plays a useful role in the responsible granting of credit, and as such is of benefit to both lenders and borrowers. However, consumers need to understand the basis of credit scoring and the procedures involved, and what steps they can take if they are refused credit. The revisions to the Guide will help provide greater openness and transparency in this regard. [...]"
(1) When a credit grantor tells an applicant that his credit application has been declined, the grantor is obliged to provide a clear explanation of the principal reason why the applicant has not met the lending criteria (for example, a decline based on adverse credit reference agency data) (paragraph 6.4);(2) A credit applicant has a right of appeal where his credit application is declined (paragraphs 5.11 & 7.7);
(3) Where a credit applicant appeals a declined credit application, the credit grantor is required to give the applicant the opportunity to provide additional relevant information and to consider that additional information when reviewing the application (paragraph 7.12); where appropriate the review must be carried out by a different lending officer from the one originally handling the application; and
(4) Where a credit grantor is aware that a Notice of Correction and/or Dispute has been filed with a credit reference agency by or in relation to an applicant, it is required to review any declined application manually (paragraph 9).
The Insolvency Service's publications
"Credit Reference Agencies - the Official Receiver does not send any form of notice to credit reference agencies. The agencies pick up information from other sources such as advertisements of bankruptcies in newspapers, "The London Gazette" and the Register of County Court Judgments. If no advertisement of your discharge from bankruptcy or the annulment of the bankruptcy order is made, separate information will have to be provided to credit reference agencies to amend their records."
"If your bankruptcy has been annulled (cancelled), you will need to send proof to the credit reference agencies."[21]
The Judge's Approach
"Any repeat application for credit will be treated as a new application, and assessed accordingly. An applicant for credit will not be declined or accepted solely on the grounds of having made a previously declined or accepted application to that credit grantor."
Section 9 provides:-
"Where a credit grantor is aware that a Notice of Correction and/or Dispute has been filed with a credit reference agency by or in relation to an applicant, any declined application must be manually reviewed."
"119. Any detailed consideration of the bankruptcy data and the system giving rise to bankruptcy orders should have identified those subject to rescission as being a special class within the class of those subject to early termination of their bankruptcy orders. They are a tiny number, it would be rare indeed that they had brought the bankruptcy order onto themselves in the first place and, at least in the early 2000s, they were not covered by the guidance offered to those whose orders had been annulled.
120. Equifax should also have noticed that those whose orders were annulled were immediately brought to the attention of the OR and had their entry on the IIR automatically removed since the court that had made the annulment order would have sent a copy of that order to the OR who had a duty immediately to amend the IIR on receipt of it. Although the same notification process did not occur for those subject to rescission and stay orders, the numbers were tiny and the extra task of reporting these to the OR would not have been great. Indeed, rescission orders are now invariably brought to the attention of the OR by the relevant court and their entry on the IIR is immediately corrected.
121. Whether alone or in conjunction with the other two licensed CRAs, Equifax could have held discussions with the Secretary of State and the IS to seek to persuade those parties to modify the then current arrangements so that: (a) courts dealing with personal insolvency reported on rescission and stay orders in addition to annulment orders that were already subject to a reporting regime; (b) the Secretary of State arranged for those subject to annulment, rescission and stay orders to be the subject of an automatic report in the London Gazette and (c) the RBO and, subsequently, the IIR reported in a separate part of the register a list of all those bankruptcy orders subject to rescission, annulment or stay that could be consulted by CRAs and the public.
122. As an alternative, Equifax could have considered and then implemented other ways of obtaining data about orders relating to the termination of bankruptcy orders by means other than discharge."
The alleged co-extensive duty of care in tort
"127 . . . Given the framework, duties and compensation provisions of the DPA, Equifax, by deciding to operate as a CRA and provide credit checks and references to customers, has assumed a responsibility to the consumers whose personal data it holds for the benefit of its customers. This is the liability that is imposed on it by the DPA when it chooses to offer services as a CRA and it owes the same duties to affected consumers as it owes to them by virtue of the statutory data protection principles that it must apply. In both cases, it must act with reasonable skill and care.
128. It seems to me self-evident that since common law duties can co-exist with statutory duties based on a similar failure to exercise reasonable skill and care, a statutory tortfeasor acting negligently is ordinarily also to be found to be liable in common law negligence. The only practical consequence of this somewhat conceptual distinction between liability for breach of statutory duty and liability for breach of a common law duty is that it is conceivable that the rules of remoteness, scope of duty, recoverable loss and limitation are, in some situations, more generous in negligence than in statutory duty and, in the case of distress, more generous in statutory duty than in negligence."
"The question of whether the order can have generated a duty of care is comparable with the question of whether a statutory duty can generate a common law duty of care. The answer is that it cannot: see Gorringe v Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council [2004] 1 WLR 1057. The statute either creates a statutory duty or it does not (that is not to say, as I have already mentioned, that conduct undertaken pursuant to a statutory duty cannot generate a duty of care in the same was as the same conduct undertaken voluntarily). But you cannot derive a common law duty of care directly from a statutory duty."
"(1) It is doubtful whether it was reasonably foreseeable that the recording of incorrect data on Mr Smeaton's credit reference would cause him any loss, having regard to the practices operated by the credit industry set out in the Guide to Credit Scoring 2000. A person whose credit application was rejected because of adverse CRA data would be told of that fact and would be entitled to take steps to correct (or dispute) that data and to require the lender to reconsider the application for credit having regard to further, correcting information provided by the applicant.
(2) It would also not be fair, just or reasonable to impose a duty. In particular, imposing a duty owed to members of the public generally would potentially give rise to an indeterminate liability to an indeterminate class.
(3) It would also be otiose given that the DPA provides a detailed code for determining the civil liability of CRAs and other data controllers arising out of the improper processing of data.
(4) Apart from the DPA, Parliament has also enacted detailed legislation governing the licensing and operation of CRAs and the correction of inaccurate information contained in a credit file in the CCA 1974. This provides for the possibility of criminal sanctions, but does not create any right to civil damages. In such circumstances it would not be appropriate to extend the law of negligence to cover this territory."
I agree.
(1) No(2) No
(3) Does not arise, but had it arisen No.
Lord Justice Davis :
Sir Robin Jacob :
Note 1 These are incorrectly referred to in Judgment 2 at [88] as the Consumer Credit (Credit Rating Agencies) Regulations. [Back] Note 2 See s.412 of the Insolvency Act 1986 [Back] Note 3 Insolvency Rules 1986, rule 6.34(1) [Back] Note 4 Insolvency Rules 1986, rule 6.34(2) [Back] Note 5 Insolvency Rules 1986, rule 6.223(B)(1) (until 1 April 2004); rule 6A.2 (since 1 April 2004) [Back] Note 6 Insolvency Act 1986, s.279(1) [Back] Note 7 See Fitch v. Official Receiver [1996] 1 WLR 242, 246 [Back] Note 8 Insolvency Rules 1986, rule 6.213(2) The time period for such notification has varied over time: currently notification must be given as soon as reasonably practical: see Judgment 2 at [25]. [Back] Note 9 Insolvency Rules 1986, rule 6.223A(5) (until 1 April 2004); rule 6A.5 (since 1 April 2004). [Back] Note 10 Judgment 2 at [26] [Back] Note 11 cf Attorney General of Belize v. Belize Telecom Ltd [2009] 1 WLR 1988, per Lord Hoffmann at [16]-[27] [Back] Note 12 This point is only of limited significance to the present appeal, because as explained below, the CRAs did not at the relevant times obtain their bankruptcy data from the Insolvency Service or the Register. [Back] Note 13 Insolvency Rules 1986, rule 6.223(A)(6) (inserted by the Insolvency (Amendment) Rules 1999, rule 8). [Back] Note 14 Insolvency Rules 1986, rule 6.213. The rule only makes provision for annulments to be advertised. However, rescissions of bankruptcy orders can in practice be advertised in the Gazette, as the Judge acknowledged at [93]. [Back] Note 15 Insolvency Rules 1986, rule 6.34(3) [Back] Note 16 Consumer Credit (Credit Reference Agency) Regulations 2000, regulation 3 [Back] Note 17 First Witness Statement of Nicholas Beresford, paragraph 53 [Back] Note 18 Consumer Credit (Credit Reference Agency) Regulations 2000, regulation 3 [Back] Note 19 It is now part of the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills. [Back] Note 20 See Judgment 2 at [94], [100], [101(7)]. [Back] Note 21 Information Commission: Credit Explained, December 2005 [Back]